Swept Again: U.S. Curling Women Finish in Last Place at Olympics

"This team is a better team than our performances this week," says U.S. curler Ann Swisshelm

Jessica Schultz of United States competes during the curling women's round robin match between United States and South Korea on Day 10 of the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics at Ice Cube Curling Center on Feb. 17, 2014 in Sochi, Russia.

Team USA was swept out of Sochi in women’s curling after a stone-cold blowout by South Korea capped a disastrous Olympics.

The United States (1-8) finished in last place for the second consecutive Olympic Games after losing 11-2 to South Korea in seven ends.

"This team is a better team than our performances this week," said U.S. curler Ann Swisshelm, who had tears in her eyes as she left the ice. "That's pretty heart-breaking."

Britain's women kept their chances of reaching the Olympic curling semifinals alive by beating Russia 9-6 on Monday, and eliminating the host nation from the tournament.

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Eve Muirhead's world champion team has a 5-3 win-loss record and can join Canada and Sweden in the playoffs with a win over Denmark in their last round-robin game later Monday.

Muirhead's team failed to reach the Olympic semifinals in 2010, despite being one of the favorites.

Japan defeated China 8-5, leaving both teams tied with Switzerland at 4-4. China plays Switzerland in the standout game on Monday evening, with the loser eliminated and the winner securing at least a tie-breaker game. Japan plays Sweden.

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Russia is out of contention for the semifinals, a disappointment for the tournament as a whole as the atmosphere and noise in the crowd has lifted this week every time the host nation's team played. Russia is also out of the men's competition.

After conceding four points in the eighth end, the Russian women scored three points in the 9th to bring the score back to 7-6 but Britain had the hammer in the last end.

Muirhead kept her nerve to make a simple takeout with her final shot for two game-clinching points.

"Sitting in the hack during my last shot, I actually couldn't hear myself think," Muirhead said. "I was just hoping there wasn't a really important line call where the sweepers would have to hear me scream, because there's absolutely no way they would have heard me."

Canada (8-0) is guaranteed to be seeded No. 1 in the semifinals and could become the first team in women's Olympic curling to go through the round-robin stage undefeated if it beats South Korea in the evening session.